Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Arizona introduces 1031 exchange legislation

The State of Arizona, following the lead of many other western states, has introduced a bill to regulate Qualified Intermediaries doing business in its state. Senator Thayer Verschoor has introduced Senate Bill 1333 that establishes regulations for exchange facilitators (defined as a person that facilitates an exchange of like-kind property). The bill includes provisions to protect consumers while balancing regulation against common sense allowing ethical Qualified Intermediaries to do business in Arizona.

Similar to laws in California and other, mostly western, states, Exchange facilitators will be required to maintain bonds in an amount of at least $1 million executed by an insurer, deposit at least $1 million in an interest-bearing or money market account (this is higher than other states that have typically required $250,000), or deposit all exchange funds in a qualified escrow account or qualified trust. It also requires QIs to maintain an errors and omissions insurance policy of at least $250,000.

The bill also requires Exchange Facilitators to hold all exchange funds in a manner that provides liquidity and preserves principal and to invest exchange funds in investments that meet the prudent investor standards. The prudent investor rule doesn't specify what instruments Intermediaries must hold funds. Rather, it uses a common sense approach to which investments should be chosen based on their suitability for each escrow account's client. In the case of Qualified Intermediaries entrusted with holding money on a short-term basis, 1031 Corporation has always followed the practice of limiting the funds placed in its trust to individually-segregated, liquid bank accounts.

We applaud Senator Verschoor and Senator Chuck Gray who have lead this sensible approach to legislation. Investors with property in Arizona can be confident that standards of 1031 exchange business practice exist and ethical Qualified Intermediaries in the state can continue to do business without difficult and unpractical regulation.

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